Reason Why a USB Flash Drive Is Not Showing Up
There are many different reasons why your USB flash drive is not showing up on your computer. Here are the likely reasons:
The drive isn’t seated properly in the port. The drive isn’t on (this is rare, but some some models of USB drives have a physical power switch). The USB port on computer is bad. The USB drive itself is broken.
How Do I Get My USB Drive to Show Up?
If you’ve tried basic troubleshooting fixes for getting your USB flash drive to show up, there are other options. Here’s how to get your USB drive to show up.
Make sure the USB drive is fully seated in the port. It sounds funny (or a little gross), but check to see if anything is stuck in the port of the computer or the drive plug itself. This is rare, but is the drive on? Some USB drives have power switches, so check to see if it does and if it’s in the “on” or “enabled” position. Try a different USB port. If your USB drive won’t work via one USB port, try a different one on your computer. If the drive shows up when you use a different port, you likely have a bad USB port on your computer. If the drive doesn’t show up using any USB ports on your computer, try a different computer. Restart your computer. A predictable if often effective method, try restarting your computer. Sometimes, it can fix a temporary issue. Use it directly. If you use a USB hub and your USB drive isn’t detected, try unplugging the hub and plugging the drive in directly. Some hubs don’t have the power for external drives, particularly if they’re old. Reinstall the USB drivers. If your USB drive won’t work and nor will any other USB devices, you may need to reinstall its drivers. Open Device Manager, click Universal Serial Bus controllers then right click the USB hub and click Uninstall device. Restart your computer to reinstall the drivers automatically. Use Device Manager to scan for changes. Windows Device Manager has been around for many years. It’s a great place to look for any issues. Open it then select Action > Scan for hardware changes to force the computer to find your USB drive. Partition the drive. If your USB stick shows up as an unallocated space in Disk Management, you will need to create a partition on it to use it. Creating a partition is fairly simple and is accessible via Disk Management. Allocate a letter to the drive. If your USB drive shares the same drive letter as an existing hard drive, it may need to be allocated a different letter to work. Use Disk Management to change the drive letter to an unused letter of the alphabet.